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Spokane, Washington  Est. May 19, 1883

Nose-job question was rude, ignorant

Washington Post

Carolyn Hax is away. In her absence, we are offering readers’ favorites from her archive.

Dear Carolyn:

My 13-year-old niece is tiny and has a big nose. We live in a community where a lot of teenage girls have cosmetic surgery at 16. I suggested to my brother in private that his daughter may be a candidate for this procedure. (My 19-year-old stepdaughter and my wife have had nose jobs.) My brother was deeply offended and angry over my remark. We are not talking. Was I over the line in making this suggestion in a private setting?

– P.

Of course you were, and you know you were. You just called your niece so ugly she needs to be fixed, to her own father – and you presumed he needed you to say so. Insulting and self-important.

And while cosmetic surgery might be so common by now that its bolder recipients laugh about it openly, it’s hardly the simple snip-and-go you make it out to be. There are legitimate matters of safety, body- and self-image, cultural identity and aesthetic value, just for starters – and that’s just in the collective view of society. Apply these matters to the life, confidence and physique of a barely pubescent girl, and you were into outrageous-overstepping territory pretty much when you opened your mouth.

“In private,” by the way, just tells me you were fully aware this was touchy.

People tend not to grow fully into their bodies until well after age 16. A nose that looks disproportionate on a teenager can be Modigliani-stunning on a 26-year-old whose face has caught up.

So take the above as a rough estimate of the repairs you’re facing with your brother. And your apology has to show your brother that you get it now, that you should have before, that your values need an overhaul and that you don’t expect him to trust you until you prove you’re worthy of that.